About
The Albertus Magnus Research Group is a Catholic lay initiative dedicated to fostering faithful, intellectually rigorous, and spiritually grounded engagement with Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAP) and Non-Human Intelligence (NHI), ensuring such discussions remain anchored in fidelity to the Magisterium and Christ-centered truth.
Albertus Magnus (Saint Albert the Great) is the patron saint of scientists, philosophers, medical technicians, and theology students. He is honored as a Doctor of the Church.
A 13th-century Dominican polymath, Albert pioneered the integration of faith and reason, showing how scientific inquiry can be sanctified by grace and virtue. He enriched Aristotelian science with observations in astronomy, botany, zoology, physics, and more, while discerning legitimate inquiry from superstition.
He famously asked, “Do there exist many worlds?”—calling it one of nature’s noblest questions—and explored ideas of other realms or non-human intelligences, prefiguring modern exotheology and NHI discussions.
Canonized and declared a Doctor of the Church by Pius XI in 1931, he was named patron of natural sciences by Pius XII on December 16, 1941—providentially, on the eve of the atomic age. His legacy guides ethical exploration of the cosmos.